
Decisionmaking in a Glass House: Mass Media, Public Opinion, and American and European Foreign Policy in the 21st Century
Author(s): Brigitte Nacos (Editor), Robert Y. Shapiro (Editor, Contributor), Pierangelo Isernia (Editor), Bruce Chadwick (Contributor), Dennis Chiu (Contributor), Richard C. Eichenberg (Contributor), Robert M. Entman (Contributor), Philip Everts (Contributor), Ronald H. Hinckley (Contributor), Ole R. Holsti (Contributor), Natasha Hritzuk (Contributor), Lawrence R. Jacobs (Contributor), Steven Kull (Contributor), Natalie La Balme (Contributor), Benjamin I. Page (Contributor), Clay Ramsay (Contributor), Martin Shaw (Contributor), Eric Shiraev (Contributor), Richard Sinnott (Contributor), Richard Sobel (Contributor), Eugene R. Wittkopf (Contributor), John Zaller (Contributor), Vlad Zubok (Contributor)
- Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
- Publication Date: 4 Oct. 2000
- Language: English
- Print length: 384 pages
- ISBN-10: 0847698262
- ISBN-13: 9780847698264
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
Each essay is a substantive treatment of its topic. Many of the eighteen essays are valuable individually. ―
Contemporary SociologyThese essays . . . provide important insights and raise provocative questions that will prove essential as a foundation upon which other scholars will base their research. ―
American Political Science ReviewA good candidate for contemporary status as a basic text from which to ponder how the broad theoretic framework of concepts identified by Hennessy has evolved in the 35 plus years since Lyndon Baines Johnson was in the White House and Nikita Krushchev was in the Kremlin. The talent pool which produced this book runs wide and deep. One is hard put to cite a chapter that isn’t worthwhile, either as a datamine or for the threoretic stimulation offered, and sometimes for both the quality and clarity of evidence and theory. ―
International Journal Of Public Opinion ResearchThis excellent collection represents the state of the art in comparative studies of public opinion and foreign policy. — Bruce Russett, Yale University
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